Device: eb1150 & is that a nook in her pocket, or she just happy to see you?

wow, that's amazing work. being able to read epub on kindle is going to open the device up a lot, particularly for people who don't live in the US / read english, and therefore can't / don't shop at amazon for books. bravo !

The Good:1- You can install it in easy way: just copy extracted files on the root of Kindle storage.2- Uninstallation is the same ease: just delete "local" folder and "usbnetwork" file from "usbnet" folder.3- You will have a text editor, web browser. Vertual terminal (Command-line) and more.4- Unicode filenames support.

The Bad:1- It still slower than original framework.2- Can not use [AA] and [SYM] keys, so you can't write symbols like "@, -, +, (, ) ..etc"3- I run it by executing usbnetwork command from SSH/Telnet, it isn't work with me by above way (by Kindle search commands).
It uses an old version of USBNetwork hack which I don't know which one is it.

Okay, then it relies on the usbnetwork symlink, that explains it. (And also explains the dependency on the usbnetwork hack).

Which... doesn't work with my usbnet packages, since I moved the usbnetwork script, so the tweaked usbnetwork script installed by qindle isn't ever called.

Quick 'n dirty patch to usbnet/bin/usbnetwork from my package to emulate the same behaviour (double `usbNetwork to start qindle, with the only difference being that qindle will be started with the Kindle in USB MS mode, not Eth over USB. if you want to start qindle on the first `usbNetwork, with the Kindle in Eth over USB mode, move the code to the other branch of the if block).

Note that, IMHO, it's still far cleaner to use the hotkeys hack for this purpose. Like I said, we don't have any way to know if the user wants to only toggle usbnetwork or start qindle... So, right now, with this patch, we do both when either toggling to USB MS or Eth over USB, which isn't all that great...

This works OK on a rooted K3 except some of the key bindings don't seem to work, like Vol buttons which makes it a bit difficult without the tab key.
I didn't copy the usbnetwork file across, just the local files executed with /bin/sh /mnt/us/local/bin/qindle.sh
Haven't tried an epub but the viewer was good for a pdf.
Now to get the keys remapped :-)
G

And here I was thinking we'd need to reverse-engineer the display API. Am I misunderstanding, or does this Qt conversion mean we can already output to the display? If so, then holy crap, let's make a replacement for the standard Home dashboard right away so we can easily access homebrew apps.

Does anyone know of any existing open-source dashboard apps for embedded devices, especially anything using Qt?